Women, Green Spaces and the Politics of Empowerment in Imperial Russia: Empress Maria Feodorovna's Pavlovsk Park
By (Author) Dr Ekaterina Heath
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
2nd April 2026
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Gender studies: women and girls
Hardback
144
Width 129mm, Height 198mm
This book draws on the rich historical record of the Russian royal court to demonstrate how green spaces have been used as an instrument of diplomatic and political influence. Ekaterina Heath convincingly argues that parks like Pavlovsk are a fruitful new primary source, here revealing the previously obscured evidence of womens political activities. In 19th-century Russia, green spaces gave women voice and agency, frequently taken away from them by the patriarchal power structures. Women, Green Spaces and the Politics of Empowerment in Imperial Russia challenges the preceding narratives of these structures as being solely masculine. It also argues for the need to consider consorts in the analysis of political life at the Russian court. Their soft power strategies were deployed through their gardens, the main tool of political propaganda in the long 18th century.
Ekaterina Heath discusses Pavlovsks use for building relationships, promoting virtues, mounting political arguments, and writing Russian history. She explores the strategies used by Empress Maria Fedorovna to influence Catherine II and Paul I to maintain her access to power in a precarious political environment. Heath then goes on to analyse Dowager Empress Maria Fedorovnas use of her garden to grow her power after the death of her husband, Paul I, and her son Alexander Is ascension to the throne.
Ekaterina Heath is Research Fellow at the University of Sydney, Australia. She is the serving President of the Eighteenth-Century Russian Empire Studies Association.